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How To: Promote Twitter 101

Well, my first thought – not on Twitter. Here’s the question I got (with slight revisions):

Hey Katrina,

Thanks so much for your time. So, I am helping a company run their live Tweet from a conference. We are going to hold 3 Tweet Up’s over the course of the day where we will do a ten minute Twitter 101 presentation to help people get started tweeting, join the conference conversation and learn some of the uses for Twitter.

I need to schedule some Tweets to go out during the day about our Tweet Up’s and using the hashtag to join the conversation. I was wondering if you had any suggestions of types of Tweets I should send, frequency (I don’t want to Tweet too much!) or if you had anything that worked really well for you to make an impact and get people to join the conversation.

I’m sure you are swamped so if you can’t respond right away that’s no problem. I just figured I would tap into the expert to get some ideas on best practices.

Thanks so much!

Here’s what I wrote back. Yes, I’m always this direct.

Hi –

Ideas for tweets:

Join the (hashtag) Tweetup sponsored by (company name) at (time) in the (place)

(Insert two popular twitter names that will be in attendance) will be at our (hashtag) Tweetup- will you?

Know someone who needs a Twitter 101 and networking? Come to the (hashtag) Tweetup

Other Ideas:

If possible, create some small flyers. Remember, you’re trying to reach people who aren’t Twitter savvy and aren’t sure what to do with the medium so tweets may not be the best way to reach them.

Judge frequency based on how many people are tweeting. If there are a lot of tweets, you can tweet as much as you want.

As for content, interject your sponsored tweets between RT’s of popular comments from the day. You can find those by following the hashtag at search.twitter.com.

The most important thing to remember: make sure you’re asking questions and using the hashtag! People have to a) know how to find you and b) have something to say.

Last important tip, leave room for the RT! That means your tweets should be no longer than 115 characters.

How did I do? What would you add?

Side note: A great tweet/speaking point to go with any Twitter 101

RT @itsgoodell: LinkedIn is your Rolodex. Facebook is your scrapbook. Twitter is your lifestream idea generator. I get it now.

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Published by Katrina Kibben

Katrina Kibben is the Founder and Principal Consultant of Three Ears Media. For most of Katrina's career, she has been a marketer living in a recruiter's world - listening to both sides of the talent equation to understand the real issues and find solutions for engaging and hiring better people. Today, she uses her technical marketing know-how and way with words to help both established and emerging brands develop and deliver content that fuels smart recruitment marketing that makes the right people apply.
Katrina has written for Monster.com, HR.com, RecruitingDaily and many other digital publications. She is a recognized leader in recruiting and employer branding who speaks regularly at conferences around the world.
View all posts by Katrina Kibben